On my daily police blotter and news-reading, There's a good number of armed robberies per day. Very rarely do I hear about suspects being identified or arrested, It seems to me the 'wiser' criminal who wears a gloves.. mask.. drives a car that isn't THEIRS.. Gets away with armed robbery.

Not your liquor store stick up job or bank robbery, Most of these robberies are groceries, pharmacies, or other retail stores. Do they get caught and it's not news any more?

I just assume it's like auto theft - If they aren't caught on the act or leave substantial evidence to go on, it's a dead end case.

Correct, I had a client this week take a plea deal on over 20 counts and is going away for 20 years. You might hear about a string of I solved robberies, but in the end they always seem to get caught. Usually supporting a drug habit and their cognitive thought process is a bit hampered.

As the perp commits more and more crimes, they get more and more comfortable. Thus, they get more and more careless. I've talked to lots of bad guys who honestly believed it was impossible for them to get caught, speaking from the back seat of the radio car.

To paraphrase an old saying: "There are bold robbers and there are old robbers; but there are no old bold robbers!" Sooner or later these robbers will run into the wrong guy who has a bullet waiting for them with their name on it or a judge who has a place for them to go for a long time.

Robbery in the US in 2012 was cleared by arrest 28.1% of the time. In California in 2012, a bit under half of robberies were committed by perpetrators with some kind of weapon (28,859/55,901 listed as 'strongarm").

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No one will really understand politics until they understand that politicians are not trying to solve our problems. They are trying to solve their own problems - of which getting elected and re-elected are number one and number two. Whatever is number three is far behind.
- Thomas Sowell

I've been saying that for years ...

There is no value at all complaining or analyzing or reading tea leaves to decide what these bills really mean or actually do; any bill with a chance to pass will be bad for gun owners.

As the perp commits more and more crimes, they get more and more comfortable. Thus, they get more and more careless. I've talked to lots of bad guys who honestly believed it was impossible for them to get caught, speaking from the back seat of the radio car.

Most of the morons I see who do the robberies run in with no sort of identity concealment - Face, fingerprints, gang tats all showing. I used to ask myself why, is it because they know they can plea out and get out on probation?

Then I remembered, if they're dumb enough to do any of that without thinking beforehand, they're probably not that bright in the first place

A cop buddy of mine once told me the truly smart criminals don't get caught. He said they were few and far between. I asked what he based that on and he said he met plenty of bad guys that he knew were doing crimes just couldn't prove it. Or at least get it taken to trial.

Robbery in the US in 2012 was cleared by arrest 28.1% of the time. In California in 2012, a bit under half of robberies were committed by perpetrators with some kind of weapon (28,859/55,901 listed as 'strongarm").

Thanks for the table.

Auto theft has the lowest clearance rate, I'll go out on a limb and say 9/10 offenders get away with auto theft.

Auto theft has the lowest clearance rate, I'll go out on a limb and say 9/10 offenders get away with auto theft.

Part of the problem with auto theft (at least in my area) is that a relatively small number of crooks are responsible for almost all of the auto thefts. We generally know who they are, but it is very hard to actually pin them to each/every case and thereby "solve" the crime. Its not uncommon to arrest guys/gals with more than 50 thefts under their belt in the past few months but they usually only get charged in a few of the cases (fingerprints, caught in the car, etc).

I wouldn't say auto thieves get away with the crime per se, but they might get "off" compared to the total number of crimes they have committed as compared to the ones they are convicted of.

Part of the problem with auto theft (at least in my area) is that a relatively small number of crooks are responsible for almost all of the auto thefts. We generally know who they are, but it is very hard to actually pin them to each/every case and thereby "solve" the crime. Its not uncommon to arrest guys/gals with more than 50 thefts under their belt in the past few months but they usually only get charged in a few of the cases (fingerprints, caught in the car, etc).

I wouldn't say auto thieves get away with the crime per se, but they might get "off" compared to the total number of crimes they have committed as compared to the ones they are convicted of.

1% of the population causes 100% of the problems..

A lot of the auto thefts in my area are rings, but a lot are also just ''kids'' stealing cars for a joyride, they dump them *often in my lot* and they occasionally get towed away.

Im not sure what the 'processing' is for a stolen car recovered without a driver and undamaged, if any, but there sure is a lot of hot rides out there.

A lot of the auto thefts in my area are rings, but a lot are also just ''kids'' stealing cars for a joyride, they dump them *often in my lot* and they occasionally get towed away.

Im not sure what the 'processing' is for a stolen car recovered without a driver and undamaged, if any, but there sure is a lot of hot rides out there.

Yup, its the minority of the population that ruins (or tries to ruin) the lives of those around them. Processing depends on the agency and what exactly type of stolen car it is (or if it was possibly used in some other crime as many stolens are). A carjacked vehicle in which the victim was pistol whipped will be processed different than a Saturn which was stolen/dumped in perfect shape with no other suspect information. It's also amazing how many auto thefts are related to drugs, specifically meth. Sold for money for dope, traded for dope, loaned for dope, stolen to do a driveby over money owed for dope, stolen to rob someone for dope, stolen to rob someone's dope, chopped up and sold for dope, etc.

Yup, its the minority of the population that ruins (or tries to ruin) the lives of those around them. Processing depends on the agency and what exactly type of stolen car it is (or if it was possibly used in some other crime as many stolens are). A carjacked vehicle in which the victim was pistol whipped will be processed different than a Saturn which was stolen/dumped in perfect shape with no other suspect information. It's also amazing how many auto thefts are related to drugs, specifically meth. Sold for money for dope, traded for dope, loaned for dope, stolen to do a driveby over money owed for dope, stolen to rob someone for dope, stolen to rob someone's dope, chopped up and sold for dope, etc.

Most of the stolen vehicles I come across are relatively okay, save for the occasional mangled ignition or broken window. Almost always pre 2003 cars. Mostly the common ones.

Toyota camrys, pickups, sentras, imports.

Almost always dope related, although someone stole a ford from 2 blocks away and left it in my lot, I was told it was someone who 'probably needed a ride' and it wasn't worth investigating, they just gave the car back.

A cop buddy of mine once told me the truly smart criminals don't get caught. He said they were few and far between. I asked what he based that on and he said he met plenty of bad guys that he knew were doing crimes just couldn't prove it. Or at least get it taken to trial.

Are you talking about politicians? Very rarely one is given up as an example...

This seems to be the way alot of bank robberies/commercial robbery series go... Eventually, the good guys catch the bad ones. It's fairly easy to do a single robbery, but to do a series and not get caught; that's pretty difficult.